Professor Davison Receives $1.5 Million NIH Grant

By Jennifer ScottMarch 19th, 2019in Faculty News, News

Assistant Professor Ian Davison received a new $1.5-million National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant for "Neural circuits for regulating social behavior in rodents.” This project tests basic principles for how the brain encodes sensory information about other individuals, maps it onto behavioral centers in the limbic system, and probes the learning mechanisms that adjust the sensitivity of these pathways, allowing animals to calibrate their interactions with familiar partners based on experience.

Professor Rotjan Awarded BU Supervisor of the Year

By Jennifer ScottMarch 18th, 2019in Faculty News, News

Biology Department Lecturer and Research Assistant Professor Randi Rotjan has been awarded Boston University Supervisor of the Year for 2019! Dr. Rotjan is a prolific instructor and researcher, and has clearly taken the time to work intensively with the students in her lab as well. Hayley Goss, an undergraduate in the Rotjan lab, says that Dr. Rotjan "saw something in me that no one else had, she was the first person to believe I could one day become a scientist and that I was capable of doing meaningful research within my field." PhD student Brian Kennedy also noted that he has "never had a supervisor that is so caring and yet sets such an extremely high standard." Learn more about the Supervisor of the Year award here. Congratulations on this well-deserved award, Dr. Rotjan!

Professor Cruz-Martín Receives Biogen Grant

By Jennifer ScottMarch 14th, 2019in Faculty News, News

Assistant Professor Alberto Cruz-Martín has received a two-year grant as part of a collaborative effort with Biogen to study the role of specific neuroimmune genes in the wiring of the prefrontal cortex, a brain region implicated in schizophrenia. Studies in humans and mouse models of neurodevelopmental disorders have established the involvement of immune molecules in neuronal development and brain pathology. Elucidating the function of individual genes in the brain is crucial for understanding the mechanisms of mental illness and to reveal potential therapeutic targets for pharmacological intervention.

Professors Primack and Templer Awarded NSF Grant

By Jennifer ScottMarch 12th, 2019in Faculty News, News

Professor Richard Primack and Professor Pamela Templer have received an NSF grant entitled "ADVANCE Partnership: From the Classroom to the Field: Intervention Training to Improve Workplace Climate.” The goal of this proposal is to empower academics to transform workplace climate in the fields of ecology, evolutionary biology and animal behavior through an online survey of society memberships, workplace climate workshops, development of training scenarios relevant to field work, and making training materials publicly available online.

Professor Andrew Emili Awarded NIH/NIA Grant

By Jennifer ScottFebruary 28th, 2019in Faculty News, News

Professor of Biology (CAS) and Biochemistry (BUSM) Andrew Emili and Professor of Pharmacology (BUSM) Ben Wolozin have received a joint NIH/National Institute on Aging R01 grant ($3,945,190) entitled "Systems-level functional proteomics analysis assemblies in Alzheimer's disease and mouse models of tauopathy". The goal of this proposal is to comprehensively map and identify the subnetworks of synaptic protein complexes that are central players in the synaptic dysfunction occurring with neurodegeneration. Drs. Emili and Wolozin will use the emerging power of quantitative network proteomics to systematically characterize the major protein assemblies present at normal and diseased synapses on a proteome scale. This research will be propelled by recent discoveries demonstrating that a dynamic network of protein interactions drives tau biology and changes with the course of disease. Interpreting these perturbed assembly networks, though, demands knowledge of the localization and compositional specificity of such complexes. They hypothesize that selective disruption of specific synaptic protein assemblies mediates the functional degeneration associated with tauopathy. Their unbiased interactome screening technology is uniquely suited for global interrogations of synaptic protein networks remodeled during disease progression.

Cymone Reed Publishes Biology Letters Paper

A big congratulations to Cymone Reed (CAS ’18),  the lead author along with Ph.D. student Rebecca Branconi, Postdoctoral Fellow John Majoris, Research Associate Cara Johnson, and Associate Professor Pete Buston, who published the paper “Competitive growth in a social fish” in the Royal Society’s Biology Letters. The paper demonstrates that clownfish are able to increase their growth rate in response to social competition.

Buston Lab Postdoctoral Fellow Awarded Marie Skłodowska-Curie Individual Fellowship

By Jennifer ScottFebruary 26th, 2019in Faculty News, News

Theresa Rueger, who will be joining Prof. Pete Buston’s lab as a postdoctoral fellow, has been awarded a prestigious Marie Skłodowska-Curie Individual Fellowship from the European Commission to work on Social Evolution in Coral Reef Fishes. Dr. Rueger obtained her PhD with Geoff Jones at James Cook University and she will be co-advised during her postdoc by Mike Cant at the University of Exeter.

Davies lab members attend SICB Conference in FL

Dr. Sarah Davies and lab members attended the Society of Integrative and Comparative Biology (SICB) Conference in Tampa, Florida in early January. Students received financial support to attend the conference from the Biology Department Travel Awards and UROP. They had seven podium presentations and one poster presentation. In addition, Dr. Davies and her postdoc each chaired a session on symbioses and coral reefs.

Diane Lebo Elected President of BU Graduate Student Organization (GSO)

Diane Lebo, PhD candidate in the McCall Lab, has been elected as the 2019 Graduate Student Organization (GSO) President. Diane has been the Biology GSO Representative since September 2017 and has been the GSO Treasurer since December 2017. Recent successful events that Diane helped run with the Executive Board members include several coffee hours for underrepresented graduate student groups as well as a large coffee hour for the entire graduate student population.

The Graduate Student Organization strives to ensure Boston University continues to be a safe and enriching environment for carrying out graduate education. Find out how you can get involved with GSO as a graduate student at Boston University: https://www.bu.edu/gso/get-involved/